The Phnom Penh Post

Inventor Madsen denies murder

- Gaël Brancherea­u

DANISH inventor Peter Madsen yesterday denied murdering Swedish journalist Kim Wall aboard his self-built submarine last year as his highly-anticipate­d trial opened in Copenhagen.

Madsen, who has previously admitted dismemberi­ng Wall’s body and throwing her remains overboard, did not address the court but his lawyer Betina Hald Engmark said he denied the murder charge and maintained his position that the reporter died accidental­ly on board his submarine.

Wearing a black T-shirt, jeans and black eyeglasses, Madsen appeared calm in court, his gaze often looking downwards.

The trial, scheduled to last until April 25, is expected to shed more light on the circumstan­ces of Wall’s grisly death on board Madsen’s Nautilus submarine on August 10, 2017, when she vanished after going for an evening sail with him to interview him for an article.

Her chopped up body parts, weighed down in plastic bags with metal objects, were later recovered from Danish waters off Copenhagen.

Prosecutor Jakob BuchJepsen started by presenting his opening arguments to the Nautilus court. He has previously said he will call for a life sentence, which in Denmark averages around 16 years.

An eccentric semi-celebrity in Denmark who built rockets and dreamed of developing private space travel, Madsen faces charges of premeditat­ed murder, desecratin­g a corpse, and aggravated sexual assault.

Different event versions

Wall was reported missing by her boyfriend after she failed to return home from her trip on the 60-foot (18-metre) vessel on August 10, 2017.

On that evening, the couple were having a going-away party – they were due to move to China a few days later – when Madsen, whom she had been trying to interview, contacted her and invited her out on the sub.

On a large screen in the courtroom, the prosecutor showed a series of text messages Wall sent her boyfriend from inside the submarine that evening.

“I’m still alive btw [by the way],” she wrote, adding “But going down now!” and “I love you!!!!!!” A minute later, she added: “He brought coffee and cookies tho.”

Madsen has changed his version of what happened on board several times. He has insisted her death was an accident but provided no explanatio­n.

An autopsy was unable to de- termine her cause of death, nor has a motive been establishe­d.

But prosecutor­s have said they believe Madsen killed Wall as part of a sexual fantasy.

They believe he bound the 30year-old freelance reporter by the head, arms and legs before beating her and stabbing her repeatedly in her genital area.

They said he then killed her – probably strangling her or slitting her throat – and cut her up with a saw, stuffing her torso, head, arms and legs in separate bags weighed down with metal objects, and dumping them in Koge Bay off Copenhagen.

Madsen has denied any sexual relations with Wall. He told investigat­ors he panicked after her death, and dismembere­d her and buried her at sea.

According to the prosecutio­n, investigat­ors seized a hard drive in his workshop containing fetish films, in which women were tortured, decapitate­d and burned alive. Madsen said the drive was not his.

When Wall failed to return home from her interview, her boyfriend reported the Nautilus missing in the middle of the night. Madsen was plucked from the sea the next morning by a pleasure craft, just as his vessel was sinking.

Investigat­ors believe that Madsen deliberate­ly sank the Nautilus.

 ?? PETER THOMPSON/AFP ?? The submarine with a man and a woman on its tower swims on August 10, 2017, in Copenhagen Harbor.
PETER THOMPSON/AFP The submarine with a man and a woman on its tower swims on August 10, 2017, in Copenhagen Harbor.

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